Nearly 17 million Indian children between the ages of 10 and 19—6% of the age group—are married, many of them to older men, newly-released census figures reveal.

This is an increase of 0.9 million from the 2001 census figure.

The legal age for marriage is 18, so some involved may have been adults, but it is unlikely both partners were.

Of these married children, 76%, or 12.7 million, are girls, according to census data. Only four million boys in this age group are married, reinforcing the fact that girls are significantly more disadvantaged.

More boys were married in 2011 at 4 million compared to 3.4 million in 2001. The number is constant for girls.

Uttar Pradesh has the most married children (2.8 million), followed by Bihar and Rajasthan (with 1.6 million each).

IndiaSpend has previously reported that India is ranked 6th among the top 10 countries that report child marriages among females.

Since the number of married boys is much lower than that of girls, it is clear girls are marrying older men.

For example, Uttar Pradesh has 2 million married girls in the age group of 10-19 years, while 2.8 million in total (boys & girls) are married in the age group; Girls account for 71% of the total married people in this group. It’s the same for other states.

Six million children were born to couples married in the age group of 10-19. The majority of these children were boys (3 million).

Uttar Pradesh has the highest number of children born to children: 1 million.

Maternal mortality and infant mortality rates are closely linked to early marriages.

A UNICEF study pointed that early marriage hinders educational attainment, which then leads to poor maternal health and higher infant mortality rates.

Child-bearing at a young age is detrimental to the health of both the mother and the infant. This is why child marriage affects women more than men, other than the fact that men are less likely to be married as children.

India’s maternal mortality ratio (the number of women who die during pregnancy and childbirth per 100,000 live births) has gone down from 254 in 2006 to 190 in 2014, but it is still higher than the ratio in most other countries.

Infant mortality rate (number of infant deaths for every 1,000 live births) has come down from 68 in 2000 to 56 in 2014, but is still too high and short of human-development targets.

Source: Lok Sabha; MMR data for several states are unavailable and been stated as 0.

States with higher child marriage rates report higher maternal as well as infant deaths.

The exception is Maharashtra which has a high rate of child marriage but still maintains a low maternal mortality ratio of 68. The reason for this could be improved healthcare services, as this IndiaSpend report has explained.

Married children are part of the 47% of India’s population that is currently married.

The age group of 35-39 years had the highest number of married men with 40.2 million, and the age bracket of 25-29 years had the highest number of married women with 44.6 million.

Update: A link to a UNICEF study has been modified.

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The reporting is malicious, I went to the original link where the numbers are given for age groups 10-14 and 15-19 separately. 2.7 million are in the former and 14 million in the later category. I cannot comprehend what was the need to club the two. Its unfortunate , I agree, but not so surprising considering that in the original Hindu Marriage Act of 1955 the minimum age stipulated was 15 for girls and 18 for boys, until it was raised to 18 and 21 in 1978. In most of the European Countries as well as in US the age of consent is 18 which can be lowered to 16 (in most countries). As long we dont have the data for the age bracket of 16-18 and 18-19 we cannot come to the straightaway conclusion. That leaves the 2.7 million part which is truly sad. But the article is definitely written with malafide intentions and tries to use shoddy statistical tricks to portray a sorrier picture than really is.